Live, Work and Grow in the First Palestinian Planned City Fall Edition 2011

Live, Work and Grow in the First Palestinian Planned City Fall Edition 2011

Fall Edition home 2011 RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS UNDERWAY GET TO WORK! Live, Work and Grow in the first Palestinian planned city Fall Edition 2011 RESTORING COMMUNITY LIFE: RAWABI STRIVES TO PRESERVE PALESTINIAN COMMUNITY TRADITIONS 4 RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS UNDERWAY 5 RAWABI IGNITES THE ISRAELI BOYCOTT LAW 6 CONSTRUCTION TEAM HELPS EXPAND NEIGHBORING VILLAGE SCHOOL IN AJJOUL 6 BIRZEIT BANI-ZAID BUS CO. LAUNCHES NEW ROUND-TRIP RAWABI-BIRZEIT-RAMALLAH BUS ROUTE 6 AFTER DELAYS, TEMPORARY ROAD APPROVAL EXPECTED SHORTLY 7 GET TO WORK! 8 BIM TEAM SPARKS IMAGINATIONS AT ENGINEERING DAY AT BIRZEIT UNIVERSITY 9 THOUSANDS OF HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS INSPIRED BY PALESTINE’S LARGEST PROJECT 10 AL-BIREH MUNICIPALITY HELPS RAWABI CONTROL DUST AND CONSERVE WATER 10 HIGHLIGHTS: ENJOYING THE OUTDOORS IN A PLANNED CITY 11 RAWABI MODELS COMPLETED IN QATAR 11 HUNDREDS OF WORKERS COOPERATE TO BUILD THE CITY 12 A VIEW FROM THE AIR 14 RAWABI CHAMPION HONORED IN MALAYSIA 14 MEDIA COVERAGE CONTINUES 15 RAWABI VISITORS 16 Rawabi is being developed by Bayti Real Estate Investment Company, a joint BAYTI REAL ESTATE undertaking of Qatari government-owned Qatari Diar and Ramallah-based Massar INVESTMENT COMPANY International – two companies with unsurpassed real estate development experience and extensive knowledge of regional and international markets. Phone: +970 2 241 5444 P.O. Box 2132 Rawabi will provide more than 5,000 affordable housing units with nine different floor Ramallah, Palestine plans to choose from, spread across 23 neighborhoods. The city will also include [email protected] a commercial center, a business district, a hotel and convention center, public and www.rawabi.ps private schools, medical facilities, mosques and a church, as well as extensive green recreation space. Rawabi will initially be home to 25,000 residents, with additional residential and commercial units slated for subsequent construction phases that will ultimately serve a city with a population of 40,000. Buyers are anxious to see Rawabi, and the locations of their future homes, as is apparent from frequent phone calls and unannounced visits from families from around Palestine. It was our pleasure to start inviting some of the 8,000 buyers who have officially registered through our website to visit Rawabi officially starting in October. If you are interested in owning a home or opening a business in Rawabi, we welcome you to sign up by adding your name to our database by visiting www.rawabi.ps. RAWABI ONLINE Rawabi’s Facebook Page (Rawabi: Live, Work, Grow) has grown exponentially as more people learn about Rawabi and express support for its success. Join over 9,000 fans to discuss the city and stay up-to -date on the latest announcements by visiting us at facebook.com/RawabiCity youtube.com/RawabiCity Watch videos about Rawabi, interviews with company directors, and listen to Ilham Al Madfai’s song about Rawabi at You can also follow Rawabi’s latest updates on Twitter at twitter.com/RawabiCity RESTORING COMMUNITY LIFE: RAWABI STRIVES TO PRESERVE PALESTINIAN COMMUNITY TRADITIONS Palestine is experiencing rapid urbanization, a trend it shares with virtually every nation in the world. People are leaving the countryside and flocking to urban centers in search of economic opportunities. While the long-term effects of urbanization are the subject of heated debate, the central fact is that modern urban growth must be carefully planned to accommodate the needs of a rapidly growing population, while safeguarding the many positive aspects of local culture. Palestine’s cities are especially vulnerable to the negative effects of urban sprawl and skyrocketing land prices. Constrained as Palestinians are by the occupation, additional restrictions exist on how and where landowners and developers can build. The unfortunate result is a muddled, soulless urban landscape. Ancestral family homes and neglected historic landmarks stand adjacent to petrol stations. High-rise office towers spring up in the heart of residential neighborhoods without thought to adequate parking facilities or increased traffic capacity. Moreover, lack of performance spaces, outdoor urban areas, playgrounds and walking trails is damaging the supportive community culture that has long been the bedrock of Palestinian culture. The traditional Palestinian sense of community is being chipped away, and real efforts are needed to reinvigorate it. Palestine needs suitable community gathering spaces. To this end, Rawabi is taking a strong stance to reclaim the importance of community gathering space for families and individuals in the city. The comprehensive city plan is structured around communities, from shared courtyards, to small neighborhoods clustered around gardens and playgrounds, to the pedestrian-only City Center which will draw residents from Rawabi and visitors from around the country to work and relax together. 4 Rawabi residents will gather casually in small playgrounds, shared courtyards, and walking paths. Without walls surrounding each building, Rawabi will have plenty of green space for families to relax and children to play. Made easier via organized neighborhood associations, these gathering places will create local spaces for residents to spend time together increasing and enhancing social ties. Finally, at the heart of the city will be the Rawabi City Center, thriving with cultural, business, and recreational attractions, serving as the central hub of activity for the city and surrounding areas. With people living, working, shopping, eating, and relaxing over coffee in the same central area, opportunities for social interaction will abound. Additionally, art performances, exhibitions, and a museum will reside in the city’s Cultural Center, offering plenty of activities and generating traffic in the City Center at all times. Rawabi’s restaurants and cafes, shopping and movie theaters will allure visitors day and night, making the city an exciting urban center where all feel part of a vibrant society. Rawabi will reinvigorate the traditional sense of “neighborhoods,” securing space for families and children and restoring the sense of community that has always been a fundamental element of Palestinian life. Together, all of Rawabi’s planned gathering and communal spaces will not only restore the sense of togetherness in Palestine, but will create a new sense of civic pride, energy and excitement that will make Rawabi a superb place to Live, Work and Grow. RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS UNDERWAY Workers pour concrete produced at Rawabi’s on- site concrete batch plant Foundations taking shape The foundations of Rawabi’s first six ‘hai’ neighborhoods are already standing among the hill slopes. Hundreds of new workers have joined the site, including Rawabi’s engineering and planning teams. Rawabi’s facilities now include a medical clinic and safety office, a cafeteria, and massive equipment that does not exist anywhere else in Palestine. Dozens of contractors have been hired to build Rawabi’s residential and commercial buildings. The contractors are assisted across the 215-acre site by a temporary services network that includes water, electricity and offices. 5 RAWABI IGNITES THE ISRAELI BOYCOTT LAW LAW CHALLENGES FUNDAMENTAL RULES OF ISRAELI DEMOCRACY Israeli companies, organizations and individuals must now contend with the recent passing of a law in the Knesset that imposes blanket prohibitions on any boycott of an Israeli institution or product. The intention of the law is to legally prevent any individual or group from boycotting Israeli settlement products, but the language of the law effectively prohibits boycott of any Israeli company or institution for any reason, which has Israeli civil rights groups up in arms. The law itself was prompted by a broadcast on Israeli Army Radio. During the broadcast, it was correctly stated that Rawabi has a “settlement” clause in all of its contracts stipulating that goods sold to Rawabi may not be produced in illegally-occupied land, whether in West Bank settlements, East Jerusalem, Gaza settlements, or the Golan Heights. By including the clause, Rawabi is ensuring that the city not only complies with Palestinian Authority law, but also adheres to the city’s mission to help build the Palestinian state. The clause forbidding all of Rawabi’s contractors from using settlement products has existed in every contract signed since groundbreaking, several years ago. The Israeli Knesset responded by placing a “Rawabi” clause in the boycott law, which specifically prohibited all Israeli companies from working with any firm that supplied Rawabi with raw materials or other services, with the threat of prosecution. Virtually all of the companies affected have stood by the contracts they signed, in defiance of the Knesset action. All of Rawabi’s construction is being done through Palestinian contractors, including concrete production, steel bending, road paving, and building construction. Rawabi is bringing together hundreds of Palestinian companies to construct the largest private sector project in Palestinian history. As much as possible, construction supplies are procured locally. When unavailable from the local Palestinian market, they are imported. As is the case in all construction in Palestine, this includes categories of raw material from Israeli manufacturers that are unavailable in Palestine. Rawabi’s developers fear that as construction progresses, the Israeli boycott law may force them to step up procurement from more expensive sources abroad, which may ultimately raise home prices

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